TBR Thursday: Eaters of the Dead by Michael Crichton

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I had a fabulous time reading Crichton’s Jurassic Park, and as soon as I finished I went on the hunt to find what to read next. Vikings? Arab courtier in Scandinavia? Yaaaas please.


Eaters of the Dead

The year is A.D. 922. A refined Arab courtier, representative of the powerful Caliph of Bagdad, encounters a party of Viking warriors who are journeying to the barbaric North. He is appalled by their Viking customs — the wanton sexuality of their pale, angular women, their disregard for cleanliness , their cold-blooded human sacrifices. But it is not until they reach the depths of the Northland that the courtier learns the horrifying and inescapable truth: He has been enlisted by these savage, inscrutable warriors to help combat a terror that plagues them — a monstrosity that emerges under cover of night to slaughter the Vikings and devour their flesh . . .

 

 

 

Writing Now vs. Writing Later

Sometimes I wonder what it would be like if I wrote a scene—from anything—at another point in time. Would the dialogue be the same? Would the outcome be different?

I like to make myself writing schedules for the week, mostly because my brain is an obsessive planner and it needs to know that it’ll be kept busy. However, things happen. Schedules change. Health gives you a giant middle finger. I’ve gotten better with the changes here and there as I get older. I used to go into mild panic attacks whenever I didn’t get all my things on a to-do list done, or if I had to switch things around. Not anymore, thankfully. Sure, the guilt is sometimes still there, especially if I put off writing, but at least it isn’t a full breakdown.

But I do wonder what the outcome of my work would have been like if I’d actually written the scene/chapter/whatever when I was supposed to. Would it have been shit because I was tired at the time? Would it have been amazing? Have I missed out on genius?

I tend not to rewrite entire scenes. I usually just fiddle around with it until I’m happy, then move on to the next. Maybe I ought to start… See what’ll happen when I write the same scene at different points.

Maybe I’ll do that. Time to find a prompt and write it at two different points during the week.

FOR SCIENCE.

Has anyone else had similar thoughts? Or actually done my little experiment? What was your outcome?

 

 

 

The King is now on Goodreads!

Just a quick FYI to all my reader babes out there: The King is now available for you to add to your Goodreads TBR! If all goes well and nothing horrific goes wrong, it will be available for purchase November 21st.

And as I mentioned, I’m hosting a cover reveal October 21st. If anyone needs blog content for that day, I’m happy to oblige!

The Authors’ Oracle Questionnaire: The Chariot

Find original questionnaire here!

VII.  The Chariot:  Tell us about the first “darling” you ever “killed”.

The first darling I ever killed outside of fanfiction was a character named Coah in a paranormal romance YA fantasy esque… thing. And he didn’t die in the original draft. He survived. Then in round two, I thought, nahhh he’s awesome, so let’s really stick it to the reader by killing him. He ended up falling into a pit in the forest, a trap, and was impaled on some grotesque spikes. Grisly.

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#me

Outside of original works, I definitely killed a main character in a fanfiction piece I wrote a loooong time ago. Fanfiction was where I got my start, and I had a wildly popular story about Draco Malfoy dating a Muggleborn girl (maybe?). No. Noooooooo she might have been Voldemort’s daughter? Fuck it. Who remembers. But anyway, people were in love with the story, and in the end, ol’ Voldie murders her and people lost. their shit.

And I loved it. #readertears